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Commendation Quotes:
"Naomi Kanakia is not afraid of greatness. In a searching series of question-driven chapters, she renews a lifetime reading plan for the twenty-first century reader. While frankly acknowledging that 'there is no such thing as a universal classic, ' this volume speaks to 'a deep hunger' for the greatness of books--and in doing so, reopens a library for the autodidact in all of us."--
Scott Newstok, author of How to Think like Shakespeare
"Naomi Kanakia's deep love and knowledge of classic literature make her the perfect guide for readers who are just beginning the adventure of reading the Great Books or a charming companion for those who have been reading them all their lives.
What's So Great About the Great Books? is practical, honest, straightforward, sensible, and amusing. It's exactly what we need right now."--
Henry Oliver, author of Second Act and the literary blog The Common Reader
"A beautifully reasoned, deeply personal exploration that restores humanity to the Great Books and reminds us why stories continue to matter across centuries."--
Sam Helmick, president, American Library Association
"If you've ever wanted to read the Great Books, or ever wondered why you should, this is the book for you. Personal, humorous, and intimate,
What's So Great About the Great Books? gives us a great gift: a grounded guide to the classics, and a new standard for introducing these books to modern readers."--
Jared Henderson, author of the blog Commonplace Philosophy
"Is reading the Great Books worth the shame, the difficulty, and the problematic politics that surround them? Naomi Kanakia, a fearless writer who educated herself on the classics, argues that these texts offer an unflinching honesty that cultivates the aesthetic sense needed to navigate life's moral complexities. This personal, pragmatic defense reclaims works from Homer to Tolstoy for every individual curious to find the treasure within their pages."--
John Kaag, author of American Philosophy: A Love Story
"If there's one thing our culture needs, it is people from all walks of life reading more and better books. If talk of Great Books seems stuffy and overheated, Naomi Kanakia's voice--clear, matter-of-fact, and brave--opens the windows and lets the breezes in."--
Zena Hitz, author of Lost in Thought
"Naomi Kanakia's treatment of the Great Books is deviously casual and unassuming. But don't be fooled: it's a deeply informed, incisive, and far-reaching argument for why Great books are worth the effort they demand, why they are, indeed, great, and why their greatness is inseparable from their problematic character. There is no better introduction to why the Great Books matter and how to start reading them than this book."--
Roosevelt Montas, author of Rescuing Socrates
Review Quotes:
"Through an intimate discourse on identity and literature,
What's So Great About the Great Books, interrogates the canon. . . . Provocative."
---Danielle Shi, Zyzzyva
Biographical Note:
Naomi Kanakia writes a popular literary blog,
Woman of Letters, that's been praised by
The New Yorker,
Vox, and
New York Magazine. She is also the author of three YA novels and a literary novel for adults.
Review Quotes:
"A convincing case for Great Books as the road to self-discovery and moral action."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
Commendation Quotes:
"Naomi Kanakia's treatment of the Great Books is deviously casual and unassuming. But don't be fooled: it's a deeply informed, incisive, and far-reaching argument for why Great Books are worth the effort they demand, why they are, indeed, great, and why their greatness is inseparable from their problematic character. There is no better introduction to why the Great Books matter and how to start reading them than this book."--
Roosevelt Montas, author of Rescuing Socrates
"If there's one thing our culture needs, it is people from all walks of life reading more and better books. If talk of Great Books seems stuffy and overheated, Naomi Kanakia's voice--clear, matter-of-fact, and brave--opens the windows and lets the breezes in."--
Zena Hitz, author of Lost in Thought
"Naomi Kanakia's deep love and knowledge of classic literature make her the perfect guide for readers who are just beginning the adventure of reading the Great Books or a charming companion for those who have been reading them all their lives.
What's So Great About the Great Books? is practical, honest, straightforward, sensible, and amusing. It's exactly what we need right now."--
Henry Oliver, author of Second Act and the literary blog The Common Reader
"A beautifully reasoned, deeply personal exploration that restores humanity to the Great Books and reminds us why stories continue to matter across centuries."--
Sam Helmick, president, American Library Association
"Naomi Kanakia is not afraid of greatness. In a searching series of question-driven chapters, she renews a lifetime reading plan for the twenty-first century reader. While frankly acknowledging that 'there is no such thing as a universal classic, ' this volume speaks to 'a deep hunger' for the greatness of books--and in doing so, reopens a library for the autodidact in all of us."--
Scott Newstok, author of How to Think like Shakespeare
"Is reading the Great Books worth the shame, the difficulty, and the problematic politics that surround them? Naomi Kanakia, a fearless writer who educated herself on the classics, argues that these texts offer an unflinching honesty that cultivates the aesthetic sense needed to navigate life's moral complexities. This personal, pragmatic defense reclaims works from Homer to Tolstoy for every individual curious to find the treasure within their pages."--
John Kaag, author of American Philosophy: A Love Story
"If you've ever wanted to read the Great Books, or ever wondered why you should, this is the book for you. Personal, humorous, and intimate,
What's So Great About the Great Books? gives us a great gift: a grounded guide to the classics, and a new standard for introducing these books to modern readers."--
Jared Henderson, author of the blog Commonplace Philosophy
Review Quotes:
"[A]n encouraging guide for contemporary adults who want to be well-read and yet are not sure whether reading Great Books will reward their time."
---Abra McAndrew, The Booktender
Review Quotes:
"What I love about Naomi as both a reader and a writer is that she has created a perspective that feels entirely her own. . . . There is something deeply motivating about watching someone pursue intellectual life with that much vigor, sincerity and curiosity. . . . What's So Great About the Great Books? [is] a thoughtful and generous defense of reading classic literature."
---Petya K. Grady, A Reading Life
Review Quotes:
"Kanakia's treatment of these subjects is wonderfully illuminating. And the extreme skepticism with which she approaches the concept gives her conclusion -- that she loves these books; and that they are worth reading -- a beautiful force... highly satisfying for any lover of literature...[Kanakia] is one of the best critics and literary Substackers around... She has a rare talent for this, and also a rare talent for erudition without pretension."
---Valerie Stivers, UnHerd
Review Quotes:
"
What's So Great About the Great Books? . . . provide[s] you many hours of worthwhile insights and ideas to chew on."
---John Warner, The Biblioracle Recommends
Review Quotes:
"Kanakia is challenging me to examine my own love for the classics, and to find new ways of discussing them."
---Marissa Wu, PureWow
Review Quotes:
"
What's So Great About the Great Books? is a spirited, welcome argument about the value of reading--reading on your own time, with your own appetites and needs, with your desire to make something meaningful of your life after your formal education is behind you. It is an appeal for reading whole books, challenging books, old books, books that have survived scrutiny and even contempt, books that affirm without simplifying, books Kanakia is willing to call 'great.'"
---Todd Shy, American Scholar
Review Quotes:
"Dynamic and thought-provoking. . . . I'd like to believe that this quirky, smart, passionate, occasionally frustrating but far more often charming volume does offer hope: that, even in the age of smartphone screens, Instagram, and TikTok, there is still room for the Great Books and for the ways in which they can help us think more deeply about what it means to be a human being and a citizen."
---Cathy Young, The Bulwark
Publisher Marketing:
A popular novelist and literary blogger answers those who claim the classics are too difficult, too problematic, and too white--and explains what we gain by reading them
When she was in her early twenties, then-aspiring writer Naomi Kanakia set out to read the Great Books--humankind's most highly regarded literary classics, representing "the best that human beings have thought or said," as determined by the two elderly intellectuals who'd written the guidebook she consulted. After twenty years, she has made her way through about two-thirds of these books, and she's found reading them to be an immensely pleasurable and insightful activity. Plato, Milton, Tolstoy, Proust, all those dead guys--their books have stood the test of time.
But since beginning her journey, Kanakia has found that although reading the Great Books is part of a longstanding tradition of engaging with the thought of previous generations, it is also a highly contingent activity that arose out of a specific time and place, the brainchild of a small group of early twentieth-century popularizers associated with Columbia University and the University of Chicago. And people have always been skeptical about the idea of reading the Great Books, asking if this is truly a realistic or even desirable goal for the ordinary person. A more recent and growing group of Great Books skeptics asks if these works are too problematic, reactionary, and irrelevant to bother reading. Kanakia, a self-described "left-of-center person," grapples with these objections, attempting to restore context for the Great Books even as she sticks up for them. Because books that expose us to fundamental truths about the nature of beauty and reality are worth fighting for.
Review Citations:
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Kirkus Reviews 02/01/2026 (EAN 9780691251929, Hardcover)
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